T HE G LENCOE L ITERATURE L IBRARY Study Guide for The Metamorphosis by Franz Kafka i Meet Franz Kafka spare time. He also began to write short sketches and other pieces of fiction. Soon after graduating with a law degree in 1906, Kafka began working in a government work- ers’ insurance office. Like Gregor Samsa, the main character of The Metamorphosis, Franz Kafka still lived with his parents. His work at the insurance office, while dull, did leave some time for Kafka to pursue his interest in literature. However, family tensions, the deteriorating health of his parents, and his own self doubts made concentrating on his writing difficult. He began to keep a diary and also started work on his novel Amerika. In 1912, when he was twenty-nine, Kafka wrote The Metamorphosis. That same year, he had I am separated from all things by a hollow space, and met Felice Bauer, a visitor from Berlin. Although I do not even reach to its boundaries. he was tortured by his usual self-doubts, Kafka became engaged to Felice in 1914. Three months —Franz Kafka, in a letter of December 16, 1911 later, he broke the engagement, worried that mar- riage and family life were incompatible with his writing. Several months later, they became ranz Kafka was born in Prague, then a part of engaged again. In August of that year, Kafka Fthe Austro-Hungarian Empire, on July 3, 1883. finally moved out of his parents’ home. He began He was the oldest surviving child of Jewish parents work on a novel, The Trial, the dark, eerie tale of Hermann Kafka, a successful merchant, and Julie a man arrested and executed for reasons he never Löwy Kafka. Hermann Kafka was an overbearing discovers. man who was never able to appreciate his son’s The year 1917 was a startlingly productive special talents. The strained relationship between one for Kafka, during which he wrote about a father and son became the key element in Kafka’s dozen stories. These stories feature bizarre situa- personality and led to lifelong guilt, anxiety, and tions and characters that embody the alienation, lack of self-confidence. search for meaning, and despair of modern life. The young Franz was a good student and popu- Kafka’s health worsened, and in 1917 he was diag- lar with his classmates and teachers. Already, how- nosed with tuberculosis. He took a leave of ever, the boy showed signs of an inward-looking absence at the insurance institute. He also broke personality and the poor health that was to trouble his engagement to Felice a second time. In 1918 him his entire life. He disliked the authoritarian he became engaged to Julie Wohrzek, but this discipline of school life but found pleasure and engagement, too, he broke. escape in literature. The English novelist Charles The last years of Kafka’s life were marked by Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Dickens was a favorite. periods of intense writing activity, family tensions, In 1901, when he was eighteen, Kafka went unsuccessful love relationships, and worsening to the German University in Prague. He studied health. In 1922, he was forced to retire from the for a law degree, a course of study approved by his insurance institute. When he was healthy enough, domineering father and one that would lead to a he continued to write. In 1924, however, he went prestigious job, but the young man found the to a rest home in Austria, where he died at the coursework boring. His real interest was literature, age of forty-one. During Kafka’s lifetime, only a and he attended many lectures and readings in his handful of his writings were published. The Metamorphosis Study Guide 9 Introducing the Novella Kafka is important to us because his Kafka’s immense influence and popularity is this predicament is the predicament of modern man. openness to many interpretations. Readers can —British poet W. H. Auden find evidence in The Metamorphosis to support a variety of interpretations of the odd, yet heart- Kafka certainly does not provide an breaking, events. interpretation of the world. What he Because Kafka is not the kind of writer who provides is an image of how experience looks will take you by the hand and lead you to his when all interpretations are called in doubt. meaning, you will need to find your way there —British critic Anthony Thorlby yourself. On the way, you may learn to look at It would have turned out much better if I had not yourself and others differently—and you certainly been interrupted at the time by the business trip. will never think of insects in the same way after reading The Metamorphosis. —Franz Kafka, writing about The Metamorphosis in his diary THE TIME AND PLACE The Metamorphosis draws readers into the night- The novella takes place in an apartment in an marish world of Gregor Samsa, a young man who unnamed city and unspecified time, although has mysteriously undergone a monstrous transfor- the setting resembles Prague at the beginning mation. For many readers, Gregor’s dehumanizing of the twentieth century, when Kafka wrote The metamorphosis and subsequent feelings of alien- Metamorphosis. At the time of Franz Kafka’s birth ation epitomize the human condition during in 1883, Prague was the capital of the kingdom modern times. of Bohemia, a province of the Austro-Hungarian Kafka himself felt that The Metamorphosis was empire. Today it is the capital of the Czech one of his more successful achievements, and it is Republic. The population of the city in 1900, probably his most widely read work today. With when Kafka was seventeen, was about one-half the exception of one event, the plot is almost million people. humdrum in its realistic description of family ten- Prague has been called a “City of Three sions and economic worries. Kafka’s clear, straight- Peoples.” In Kafka’s time, almost all Prague resi- Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. forward style belies the terror beneath the surface dents were ethnic Czechs who spoke the Czech description. The neutral tone of the story also language. But about 6 percent of the city’s popu- reinforces the feeling that the Samsas are a normal lation were German speakers. Jews made up family—with one startling exception. The story about 5 percent of the population, and some of never becomes cartoonish because the unreality of them, as did Kafka’s family, spoke German as the situation is undercut by the realistic treatment their first language. of the events. Franz Kafka’s double minority status, as a An aspect of The Metamorphosis that is fre- German-speaking Jew in a Christian, Czech- quently overlooked is its humor. Humor is a com- speaking world, had a powerful influence in shaping mon response to emotional pain, and laughing in his personality. Jews and Germans mixed peacefully the face of hardship is not unusual. Many readers and actively with the majority Czechs, but they forget to notice the comical aspects of the story in had their own schools, newspapers, publishing their search for serious meaning. Kafka’s humor is companies, organizations and societies, theaters, especially apparent in Chapter One, as Gregor and cafes. Nevertheless, Prague’s German-Jewish makes adjustments to his new life. minority had a strong influence on the cultural As you read this puzzling work, keep in mind life of the city and included many writers, artists, that scholars and critics have argued for almost a and intellectuals. Kafka was active in these circles century about what it means. One reason for for most of his life. 10 The Metamorphosis Study Guide German-Jewish influence declined sharply, Czech provinces of Bohemia, Moravia, and part however, following the end of World War I, when of Silesia combined with Slovakia to form the the Austro-Hungarian empire was broken up. The independent nation of Czechoslovakia. Did You Know? The Metamorphosis is generally assigned to The novella form has attracted many of a category of fiction known as the novella, the greatest writers. Among the best-known novelette, or short novel. Novellas are longer novellas are Joseph Conrad’s Heart of and more complex than short stories but Darkness, Henry James’s The Turn of the shorter and simpler than novels. Short stories Screw, and Herman Melville’s Billy Budd. As usually contain one major conflict, focus on you read The Metamorphosis, ask yourself one major character, and develop one major why Kafka chose to limit the length of his theme, whereas novels present a much larger story. How might it have been different if the fictional world with many characters and author had chosen to make it a novel? What episodes. The novella usually focuses on a might The Metamorphosis have lost or gained limited number of characters, a relatively if it were written in a different form? short period of time, and a single chain of events. Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. The Metamorphosis Study Guide 11 Before You Read The Metamorphosis Chapter One FOCUS ACTIVITY Think of a situation from a dream you have had that seemed incredibly real at the time but that could not actually happen in real life. Journal Write a journal entry about your dream. What happened in the dream? What details made it seem real? What feelings did you have while dreaming? Afterward? Setting a Purpose Read to discover how one young man reacts when the world of dreams seems to have intruded upon the real world. BACKGROUND Animals as Characters The Metamorphosis is not the only work by Franz Kafka in which animals play a central, if quite unusual, role.
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